Puhl and Axel

345 Or. App. 670
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 17, 2025
DocketA185000
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 345 Or. App. 670 (Puhl and Axel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Puhl and Axel, 345 Or. App. 670 (Or. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

670 December 17, 2025 No. 1083

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

In the Matter of Gregory Allen PUHL, Petitioner-Appellant, and Catherine Rose AXEL, Respondent-Respondent, and Aaron James AXEL, Respondent-Respondent. Curry County Circuit Court 18DR24954; A185000 (Control) In the Matter of Aaron J. AXEL, Petitioner-Respondent, and Catherine R. AXEL, Respondent-Respondent, and Gregory Allen PUHL, Intervenor-Appellant. Curry County Circuit Court 17DR25833; A184999

Jesse C. Margolis, Judge. Submitted September 11, 2025. George W. Kelly filed the brief for appellant Gregory Allen Puhl. Natalie C. Scott and The Scott Law Group filed the brief for respondent Aaron James Axel. No appearance for respondent Catherine Rose Axel. Cite as 345 Or App 670 (2025) 671

Before Joyce, Presiding Judge, Hellman, Judge, and Armstrong, Senior Judge. HELLMAN, J. July 2024 supplemental judgment vacated and remanded; September 2024 supplemental judgment vacated and remanded. 672 Puhl and Axel

HELLMAN, J. Father appeals from a supplemental judgment entered in July 2024 that modified an existing child custody determination regarding father’s child L (July 2024 supple- mental judgment) and a supplemental judgment entered in September 2024 awarding attorney fees and costs to step- father (September 2024 supplemental judgment).1 Father advances three assignments of error. In his first assign- ment, father argues that under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA), the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enter the July 2024 supplemental judgment. Second, father assigns error to the trial court conditioning his parenting time on a ther- apist’s written recommendation. Third, father contends that the trial court erred in awarding attorney fees and costs to stepfather in the September 2024 supplemental judgment. As explained more fully below, we vacate and remand the July 2024 supplemental judgment for the trial court to eval- uate whether, given the totality of the circumstances, father, mother, stepfather, and L no longer “presently resid[ed]” in Oregon in August 2022—the date that the motion to modify was filed—such that the trial court no longer had exclusive, continuing jurisdiction to modify its custody determination for L in the July 2024 supplemental judgment. See Dept. of Human Services v. J. A. G., 344 Or App 511, 525, ___ P3d ___ (2025) (adopting “totality of the circumstances” test for determining whether the child, the child’s parents, and any person acting as a parent “presently reside” in Oregon under ORS 109.744(1)(b)). If the trial court lacked exclusive, con- tinuing jurisdiction in August 2022, then it must determine whether it nevertheless could modify L’s custody determina- tion because it had jurisdiction consistent with ORS 109.741. ORS 109.744(2). Because we vacate and remand the July 2024 supplemental judgment, which provided the basis for the trial court’s award of attorney fees and costs, we also vacate and remand the September 2024 supplemental judgment. 1 As set out more fully below, the trial court made its original determination of custody of L in its 2018 judgment dissolving mother and stepfather’s marriage. Father later initiated a separate filiation proceeding, which was consolidated with the existing dissolution and custody proceeding. Accordingly, the trial court entered the July 2024 supplemental judgment in both proceedings. Cite as 345 Or App 670 (2025) 673

These consolidated dissolution and filiation cases have involved an eight-year-long custody dispute across three states and between the three parties, who are L’s three parental figures: L’s biological father, mother, and stepfather. In January 2018, the trial court dissolved mother and step- father’s marriage via a General Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage (2018 dissolution judgment). In that general judg- ment, the trial court made the initial custody determination and awarded stepfather sole custody of L. Father entered the legal picture in November 2018, when he filed a filiation proceeding to establish his biological and legal paternity of L. At that time, father also requested that the trial court set aside the 2018 dissolution judgment’s custody and parenting time provisions and allow father to intervene in that matter as L’s biological father. The trial court consolidated the dissolution proceeding and father’s filiation proceeding in June 2019. In 2019, stepfather relocated with L to Alaska on a temporary basis due to stepfather’s National Guard ser- vice. The record indicates that, prior to their move, father, stepfather, and L all resided in Oregon, while mother main- tained a residence in Washington. In January 2020, the trial court entered its first modification of the existing custody determination (2020 supplemental judgment). The trial court recognized father as L’s legal and biological father, retained stepfather as L’s lawful custodian, and provided parenting time to father and mother. The 2020 supplemental judgment also anticipated that once stepfather’s National Guard enlistment ended, stepfather and L would relocate to Washington. By April 2020, father and mother had also moved to Alaska to be closer to L. In April 2021, stepfather filed a show-cause motion seeking modification of mother’s parenting time. The motion was based in large part on allegations of mother’s conduct that were reflected in multiple petitions for domestic vio- lence protective orders against mother in Alaska. In August 2021, mother requested that the trial court hold a UCCJEA conference with an Alaska court, 674 Puhl and Axel

“regarding the proper jurisdiction” of stepfather’s pending motion to modify custody of L. In November 2021, the trial court and the Alaska court held a UCCJEA conference, during which the Alaska court “indicated that [it] would assert jurisdiction if the Oregon court were to decline juris- diction.”2 Afterwards, the trial court permitted the parties time to submit their respective arguments on the jurisdic- tional issue. On November 9, 2021, the trial court set forth its decision to exercise jurisdiction over stepfather’s 2021 motion to modify via a letter issued to the Alaska court and the parties (November 2021 letter opinion). The November 2021 letter opinion states, in relevant part: “The purpose of this letter is to set forth the decision of this court regarding continuing jurisdiction in Oregon. “There are competing factors in this instance. Of some importance is that the parties are all currently residing in Alaska and that some factual information which may be relevant to any motion to modify is based on occurrences in Alaska. Because of that, at least in the near term, there could be some added convenience related to litigating these issues in Alaska. On the other hand, the parties have known and agreed that [stepfather]’s stay in Alaska was to be lim- ited in duration and is based on his military deployment. His attorney, who has lengthy involvement with this case, is an Oregon lawyer with an office in Curry County. There are counselors who have worked on this case in both Oregon and Alaska. “The ability of a state such as Alaska or Oregon for that matter, to exercise temporary emergency jurisdiction when another state has exclusive, continuing jurisdiction is not alone a significant consideration in relation to the deter- mination of whether a court should maintain its exclusive, continuing jurisdiction.

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Related

Skaug and Skaug
Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2026
Puhl and Axel
345 Or. App. 670 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2025)

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Bluebook (online)
345 Or. App. 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/puhl-and-axel-orctapp-2025.